Earthquake Glue

What spectral force, illusion, or trick of light has fooled so many erstwhile critics into apologizing for
Robert Pollard over ...

What spectral force, illusion, or trick of light has fooled so many erstwhile critics into apologizing for
Robert Pollard over these long years since the broadly accepted twilight of Guided by Voices' reign over the
(very nearly) barren kingdom of indie rock as we now know it? The sum of all the criticism heaped on GBV
for years (excepting Do the Collapse-- universally agreed upon as the absolute nadir of the band's
catalog), all the way back to Mag Earwhig!, has amounted to barely more than a weak-kneed "wait 'til
next year." And we waited, and some of us are still waiting, while others have simply given up; critics
have been crying wolf for years, so who can really blame folks for finally losing faith?

So how did he do it? Critics, notoriously, are jackals, trying, always trying, to thin the herd, to cull the
sick and dying at the first sign of weakness; Pollard, it would seem, has been staggering around on his last
legs for three or four not-so-hot-to-lukewarm albums (if that sounds like revisionist history, it's only
'cause history was wrong in the first place). And yet he still lives! How? His only defense, I now
submit to you: pure enthusiasm, a forever-young charm; I can see no other explanation. There have been
plenty of unlikely rock heroes, but after fifteen (!) albums, only Robert Pollard still sounds, for all the
highs and lows, like an ex-schoolteacher trying to live the dreams of his idols, still trying to grow into
Pete Townshend's arena-sized shoes. Deep down, I firmly believe, even Pollard's critics want him to succeed,
or at least would rather forget him than be forced to say he failed.

By now, you've seen the rating (go on, look) and if even the expectation of the phrase "better than the last
few GBV albums" stirs only cynicism within your jaded insides, it might just be the case that you're in
healthy working order. As a reformed Robert Pollard apologist, I will not ask you to see the promise of
better things to come from here or wait 'til next year; I'll go one better: Earthquake Glue meets
any GBV album that isn't named Bee Thousand or Alien Lanes. It sounds improbable, but all
I'm asking you to believe is that Bob's year to finally make good on any incubating potential he's shown
since the halcyon days of Tobin Sprout has finally arrived. A "Guided by Voices album" has meant too much,
for too long, to too many (and if you need reasons, I just mentioned both of them), but this isn't a normal
GBV album. This is Bob Pollard at his most direct, most natural, and finally ready to shake the stadiums
down to their very foundations.

It's no secret that Bob Pollard's Who-caliber aspirations have been leaking into his work way back since he
had a devil between his toes-- you can hear Roger Daltrey turning green with every swelling power chord of
"Wished I Was a Giant" and earlier. He's masked it for a long time with whimsically beautiful lyrics, lo-fi
production, and generally keeping the guitar windmilling to a minimum on soft-spoken classics like "Goldheart
Mountaintop Queen Directory", but it's been fully silenced. It hardly needs to be said, but when folks
describe you in terms like "whimsical," like a Dr.Seuss character-cum-pop superstar (the main character in
Robert Hears The Who), filling Madison Square Garden ain't gonna be easy, probably impossible. But
steadily, Bob's realized this and begun shedding the belovedly quirky trappings of his past; what's felt
like "falling off" for so long was really gradual metamorphosis into a different beast entirely.

Earthquake Glue differs from any past incarnation of GBV; the anthems here are realized to the fullest
height of their earthly majesty, with no real pretense of the muddy indie aesthetic GBV helped to usher in
out of sheer fiscal necessity more than a decade ago. This is not the shiny, breezy pop rock and crunch of
Isolation Drills; "I'll Replace You with Machines", "Beat Your Wings", "Apology in Advance"-- these
are smoke machines, strobe lights, and pyrotechnics. And Bob, with his vaguely raspy, vaguely British lilt,
sits center stage, twirling his microphone, pumping his fist with the practiced air of a rock star who truly
has "been around the block," and in a nod to his various ups and downs, "even threw up one street over."
He "keeps searching, turning on, equally frustrated," but without any hint of self-conscious indie antics,
maybe no longer; whether brooding on the shiftless, railcar blues of "Dirty Water" or transcendent on "Dead
Cloud", Pollard never struggles to find powerful vocal hooks. It finally seems effortless.

Even more surprisingly, it doesn't sound like it's just Bob's show anymore; GBV is no longer a euphemism for
"Robert Pollard and his faceless, rotating cast of backing musicians"-- these guys actually sound like an
honest-to-god-swear-on-some-bibles band. There's actual, intangible chemistry between Doug Gillard and Nate
Farley's explosive chords and Kevin March's cymbal washes. Most importantly, Tim Tobias gives Pollard
something he's lacked since Alien Lanes: a memorable bass melody that isn't devoured by jangling
guitars. Think back to "Echoes Myron" or "My Valuable Hunting Knife" and it's easy to recognize how
necessary those basslines are; for exactly one track, Tim Tobias almost single-handedly revives the old
magic.

"The Best of Jill Hives" is a GBV classic by any measure, new or old, and, like the best of Pollard's lyrical
work, is made even more meaningful by avoiding his effective, but impenetrable, stream-of-consciousness. "I
know where you get your nerve/ I know how you choose your word," he calls out, and like the wounded beauty
of "Game of Pricks", it doesn't sound like a clever fiction, but like something that happened between real
people. It's a single, brilliant, bittersweet concession; contrast that "old" sound with the sheen of
"Useless Inventions".

Some may mourn the change, but I contend that in its own way, "Inventions" is equally
classic. Endlessly catchy, as tight and triumphant as anything Pollard has ever done, this song epitomizes
the unfettered, imaginative re-invention of GBV, immersed in the hard rock tropes Pollard has until now only
toyed with. Side by side (nearly), it's clear that GBV has subtly crossed over into truly uncharted (though
nearby) territory; after playing into the same well-worn channels they've run for years, there's no more
fuzz, no more elf-kicking to conceal Pollard's hard-rock dreams; as such, Earthquake Glue never
languishes in the awkward lows that seem to plague almost everything else he's done.

In the end, it's fitting that the idea of soldiers and warriors recurs throughout the skewed landscape; GBV
has been dumbcharging at the music industry for fifteen years, and Pollard and all his various lineups have
the battle scars to prove it. In some ways, it's a shame that in order to revitalize the idea of GBV as a
band it seems to have meant abandoning the very facets that made GBV a household name around only the hippest
households so long ago, and that could be the deepest wound of all. But Pollard's perseverance has shown him
to be a hell of a soldier, and if that cut still stings, he's not letting on. In fact, closer to the end of
the battle now than the beginning, he and Guided by Voices still might be a long way from filling stadiums,
but they're not going down without a fight.